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Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo was chosen as the most anticipated series of the second half of 2016 in China, [60] reaching 300 million views after the first three episodes on the online streaming platform Youku. [61] The series reaching more than a billion views after episode 9, [62] and two billions after episode 18. [63] [64]
[5] [6] These two are essentially identical to the original except in their treatment of profanity; "Forget You" replaces the profanity with sound effects (other than "fuck you", which is changed to "forget you" per the title), and "FU" censors words by simply silencing them except replacing "fuck you" with "eff you" - also as its title suggests.
In 2010, Green resumed his solo career with his funk-inspired third album The Lady Killer, which spawned his biggest solo hit, "Fuck You" (more commonly censored as "Forget You"). The song peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 , reached the top ten in 13 countries, and won a Grammy Award for Best Urban/Alternative Performance .
By the time Forgetting Sarah Marshall opened in theaters, Segel had just under 3 seasons of How I Met Your Mother to his credit. He was practically a household name, and as a household name, he ...
The EP's associated concert, Butterfly Kiss, made Taeyeon the first Korean female artist to embark on a full-scale concert while still being a member of an active girl group. [91] In September 2016, Taeyeon recorded "All With You" for SBS's television drama Moon Lovers: Scarlet Heart Ryeo. [92] Her next single, "11:11", was released in November ...
"Forgetting All About You" is a song recorded by the American singer and songwriter Phoebe Ryan, featuring guest vocals by the American recording artist blackbear. It was released on August 4, 2017, [ 1 ] as the lead single from her second extended play, James (2017). [ 2 ]
A banjo wouldn't be out of character though. There is a minor key modality to 'Forgetful Heart'. It's like 'Little Maggie' or 'Darling Cory', so there is no reason a banjo shouldn't fit or sound right". [2] Lyrically, the song features the rhetorical device of a first-person narrator "address(ing) his heart as if it had a mind of its own". [3]
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